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B.C. Government Website Toolkit

The B.C. Government had completed a partial redesign of the gov.bc.ca website, the B.C. Government's public website. They then engaged ADGi to validate and extend the categorization of the gov.bc.ca website, to create a design for ministry and program pages, and to develop a toolkit showing how government groups could move their information into the new structure and design.

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The Centre for Interactive Research on Sustainability (CIRS) Website

The Centre for Interactive Research on Sustainability (CIRS) at the University of British Columbia (UBC) will be opening in 2011 and will be the most innovative and high performance building in North America. UBC needs a website that showcases the CIRS building and the research done there.

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Healthy Schools Portal Usability Review

In June 2011, ADGi reviewed a prototype of the Healthy Schools Portal (HSP), a new website that is a partnership between DASH BC and the Ministries of Health and Education.

Thank you ADGi for your contribution to the advancement of the Healthy Schools Portal. Your process was thorough and efficient and helped us more effectively keep the user’s experience in mind through the development process.
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Decoda Literacy Solutions Website

During April/May 2011, ADGi reviewed nine literacy websites owned by Literacy BC and the literacy department of 2010 Legacies Now and developed a solution (new website structure and layout) for merging the content and functionality from these websites together.

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CGA-Canada, User Research of Public Website

CGA-Canada contacted ADGi in late 2009 to conduct an online navigation testing study, using our NavTester tool, of the current site navigation for their public site, CGA-Canada.org.

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BC Cancer Agency Website Redesign

The BC Cancer Agency has an information-rich website that is used by cancer patients, members of the public, and health professionals from around the world. The BC Cancer Agency turned to ADGi to help redesign their website to accommodate these different audiences. ADGi gathered requirements, conducted user research, and provided a detailed design blueprint in April 2010.

Thanks ADGi. Excellent work.
Dr. Susan E. O'Reilly
Vice-President, Cancer Care
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TravelSmart 2010 Website

Early in 2010, TransLink created an informational website aimed at residents, businesses, and visitors in the lower mainland for the 2010 Winter Olympics.

TransLink contracted ADGi to provide an expert review and usability recommendations for the TravelSmart 2010 site.

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BC Centre for Disease Control Website

ADGi was hired to redesign the BC Centre for Disease Control's website. The work included requirements gathering, information architecture and navigation testing, detailed interaction design, and technical architecture/implementation advice.

Graphic design was done by Raised Eyebrow.

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The BC Centre for Disease Control (BCCDC) provides provincial and national leadership in public health through surveillance, detection, treatment, prevention and consultation services.

BCCDC’s website contains rich information but over time had become difficult to navigate and out-of-date. The site also serves diverse audiences: both the public for information on public health and health professionals needing forms and other tools. The site was not serving either audience effectively and was in need of an overhaul.

BCCDC hired ADGi to create a blueprint for a redesigned site that would include a new site structure and details on how users would navigate through the site.

The Process

For the first stage of the project, we developed the IA and then validated it with the three target audiences for the site: members of the public, health professionals, and the media. Using our online navigation testing tool, Navtester, we conducted three rounds of testing and refined the IA between each iteration.

We then created the redesign blueprint showing the new information architecture and site layout. 

The Solution

The first version of the IA that we tested was organized by either audience (general public, health professionals) or type of resource (publications, research, news). We discovered during the first iteration of testing that users did not easily identify with their audience.

We then moved to a topic based information architecture and began consolidating all information about a given topic together. The results in the navigation testing improved.

For the final site we have 7 main topical categories and all information related to a particular topic is found together. If a user goes to a particular disease page, for example, the section not only contains an overview but all related statistics, research, and news.

We also provide two alternative ways to navigate to content: resource pages and audience pages. The resource pages allow users to find content based on type of resource while the audience pages provide content of interest to particular groups. As all the content is cross-referenced, people can find information quickly no matter what path they use to navigate the site.

Raised Eyebrow then took the blueprint and created the visual design and final layout for the website. BCCDC launched the new site in June 2009.

TransLink Website

ADGi developed the information architecture for a redesigned website for TransLink, Metro Vancouver’s regional transportation authority. The redesigned site launched in April 2009.

www.translink.ca

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TransLink engaged ADGi to create a new information architecture (IA) for their website. The overall objective was to design a new user-centric IA that supported the existing content and allowed for planned growth.

The Process

TransLink has a market research department that has done extensive research into the habits and preferences of the website users, and they have developed an active online focus group panel, called TransLink Listens, whom they survey often for opinions and attitudes.

ADGi reviewed the user research that TransLink had already done and reviewed the existing site's content and structure. Then ADGi proposed a new site structure, which we validated by doing iterative online navigation testing with members of the TransLinks Listens panel.

This iterative testing allowed ADGi to create an evidence-based site structure that met the needs of the diverse users of the TransLink website. Because the proprietary tool that ADGi uses tracks the success rates and pathways of each iteration, ADGi was able to show the many stakeholders within TransLink how the new site structure would meet their objectives of focusing on easy access to customer information.

The Solution

ADGi created a detailed site map for TransLink, that they were able to hand over to their development partner to create the new site.

TransLink launched their redesigned website in April 2009.

Tourism BC Regional Websites

Tourism BC hired ADGi to create a master information architecture for Tourism BC's hellobc.com regional Asian sites based on the IA used for the North American site. The IA was designed so that it could be used in whole or in part by the various regional sites.

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